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Surrealist and Organic Abstraction In parallel with the development of geometric-style concretism, during the 1920s and 1930s, exponents of Surrealism began to produce a range of fantasy-like, quasi-naturalistic images.
organic abstraction Refers to the use of irregular shapes, or shapes based on natural forms or patterns, not geometric ones. Characterized by curving, biomorphic edges. [See Manierre Dawson's Desert in this presentation.] painterly ...
See also: Avant-garde, Abstraction, Organic, Painterly, Modern art
 
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